1896: Difference between revisions

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==Events==
==Events==
* October: The [[University of Montevallo|Alabama Girls' Industrial School]] opened to students.
* The [[Auburn University|Agricultural and Mechanical College of Alabama]] began the Old Rotation agricultural experiment.
* The [[Auburn University|Agricultural and Mechanical College of Alabama]] began the Old Rotation agricultural experiment.
* [[Brookside]] was incorporated.
* [[Brookside]] was incorporated.
* [[A. O. Lane]] began securing the purchase of 200-acres on the south slope of [[Red Mountain]] for use by the city of Birmingham.
* The [[Southern League of Professional Baseball|Southern League of Professional Baseball Clubs]] folded for a second time.
* The [[Southern League of Professional Baseball|Southern League of Professional Baseball Clubs]] folded for a second time.
* [[Thorsby]] in [[Chilton County]] was first settled by four Scandinavian immigrants.


===Business===
===Business===
* ''[[The Birmingham Age-Herald]]'' was sold to an upstart rival, ''The [[Daily State]]'', and became the ''[[Daily State Herald]]''.
* ''[[The Birmingham Age-Herald]]'' was sold to an upstart rival, ''The [[Daily State]]'', and became the ''[[Daily State Herald]]''.
* ''[[The Birmingham Ledger]]'' became ''[[The Daily Ledger]]''.
* The company that would become [[Royal Cup Coffee]] was founded.
* The company that would become [[Royal Cup Coffee]] was founded.
* [[Southern Banknote]] was founded as a division of [[Roberts & Sons]].
* [[Southern Banknote]] was founded as a division of [[Roberts & Sons]].
* The [[Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad Company]] became one of the first 12 companies to be listed on the inaugural Dow Jones Industrial Average index.


===Education===
===Education===
* October: The [[University of Montevallo|Alabama Girls' Industrial School]] opened to students with [[Henry Clay Reynolds]] as [[President of the University of Montevallo|president]].
* [[Leta Kitts]] became the first Supervisor of Music for [[Birmingham City Schools]].
* [[A.D. Smith]] succeeded [[Arthur W. McGaha]] as [[List of Samford University presidents|president of Howard College]].
* [[A.D. Smith]] succeeded [[Arthur W. McGaha]] as [[List of Samford University presidents|president of Howard College]].
* The [[Alabama A&M University|State Normal and Industrial School of Huntsville]] was renamed the State Agricultural and Mechanical College for Negroes.


=== Government ===
=== Government ===
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* [[December 1]]: [[Joseph F. Johnston]] succeeded [[William C. Oates]] as [[List of Governors of Alabama|Governor of Alabama]].
* [[December 1]]: [[Joseph F. Johnston]] succeeded [[William C. Oates]] as [[List of Governors of Alabama|Governor of Alabama]].
* [[Truman H. Aldrich]] succeeded [[Oscar Underwood]] as Representative of the [[9th Congressional District of Alabama]] before being recalled.
* [[Truman H. Aldrich]] succeeded [[Oscar Underwood]] as Representative of the [[9th Congressional District of Alabama]] before being recalled.
* [[Russell Cunningham]] began serving in the [[Alabama State Senate]].
* [[Frank Evans]] succeeded [[James Van Hoose]] as [[Mayor of Birmingham]].
* [[Frank Evans]] succeeded [[James Van Hoose]] as [[Mayor of Birmingham]].
* [[John F. McLaughlin]] was elected tax assessor for [[Jefferson County]].
* [[Edwin F. Vest]] succeeded [[Hudson W. Nelson]] as [[Shelby County Sheriff]].


===Religion===
===Religion===
* What became [[Ensley First United Methodist Church]] started as a mission of [[Martin Memorial Methodist Church]] with [[W. E. Morris]] as pastor.
* [[William A. Hobson]] became [[List of pastors of Ruhama Baptist Church|pastor]] of [[Ruhama Baptist Church]].
* [[William A. Hobson]] became [[List of pastors of Ruhama Baptist Church|pastor]] of [[Ruhama Baptist Church]].
* [[John Murray]] succeeded [[Thomas Beard]] as rector of [[Cathedral Church of the Advent]].
* [[John Murray]] succeeded [[Thomas Beard]] as rector of [[Cathedral Church of the Advent]].
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== Individuals ==
== Individuals ==
* [[May 30]]: [[James Coyle]] was ordained a priest.
* [[May 30]]: [[James Coyle]] was ordained a priest.
* [[Edward Barrett]] as elected as an Alabama delegate to the Democratic National Convention.
* [[Victor Hanson]] came to [[Alabama]] to work as advertising manager for the ''Montgomery Advertiser''.
* [[William Mailly]] left Birmingham for Nashville, Tennessee.
* [[Richard McNally]] was admitted to the bar.
* [[Richard McNally]] was admitted to the bar.
* [[Hugh Morrow (senator)|Hugh Morrow]] became an assistant solicitor for [[Jefferson County]].
* [[Hugh Morrow (senator)|Hugh Morrow]] became an assistant solicitor for [[Jefferson County]].
* [[John Rountree]] moved to Birmingham and bought part interest in the ''[[Daily State Herald]]''.
* [[William Starbuck]] was appointed secretary-treasurer of the [[Southern Bridge Company]].


===Births===
===Births===
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=== Graduations===
=== Graduations===
* [[Hill Ferguson]] from the [[University of Alabama]].
* [[Hill Ferguson]] from the [[University of Alabama]].
* [[Charles Glenn]] from Harvard University with an A.B.
* [[Wallace Rayfield]] from Howard University.
* [[Wallace Rayfield]] from Howard University.
* [[Charles Whelan, Jr]] from the University of Alabama.
===Marriages===
* [[May 6]]: Attorney [[Daniel Greene]] to the former [[Margaret Greene|Margaret Jordan Morrow]].
* [[June 10]]: Attorney [[John Hearst Miller]] to the former [[Eugenia Miller|Eugenia Alexander]].
* [[December 17]]: Pastor [[Sterling Foster]] to the former Anne Elizabeth Patterson.
* [[B. H. Cooper]] to the former Lula Jane Preston.


<!-- ===Marriages=== -->
===Deaths===
===Deaths===
* [[December 22]]: [[Bessier Parker]], second wife of [[A. H. Parker]]
* [[December 22]]: [[Bessier Parker]], second wife of [[A. H. Parker]]
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In 1896, Utah was admitted as a state.  The first modern Olympic Games were held.  The Supreme Court case of ''Plessy v. Ferguson'' was decided, upholding [[segregation]] as "separate but equal."  Charles Dow published the first edition of the Dow Jones Industrial Average.  A tornado struck downtown St. Louis, Missouri, killing more than 255 and injuring over 1,000 people.  An earthquake and tsunami in Sanriku, Japan killed 27,000.  The Atlantic City rail crash killed 50 and seriously injured approximately 60.  Republican William McKinley defeated William Jennings Bryan in the presidential election.
In 1896, Utah was admitted as a state.  The first modern Olympic Games were held.  The Supreme Court case of ''Plessy v. Ferguson'' was decided, upholding [[segregation]] as "separate but equal."  Charles Dow published the first edition of the Dow Jones Industrial Average.  A tornado struck downtown St. Louis, Missouri, killing more than 255 and injuring over 1,000 people.  An earthquake and tsunami in Sanriku, Japan killed 27,000.  The Atlantic City rail crash killed 50 and seriously injured approximately 60.  Republican William McKinley defeated William Jennings Bryan in the presidential election.


<!-- Notable books published in 1896 included .  Notable music released included . -->
Notable books published in 1896 included ''The Damnation of Theron Ware'' by Harold Frederic, ''The Well at the World's End'' by William Morris, ''Tom Sawyer, Detective'' by Mark Twain, ''Facing the Flag'' by Jules Verne, ''The Island of Doctor Moreau'' by H. G. Wells, and poetry collection ''A Shropshire Lad'' by Alfred Edward Housman.  Notable music released included "El Capitan March" by John Philip Sousa, "A Hot Time In The Old Town" by Joseph Hayden & Theodore A. Metz, ''Also sprach Zarathustra'' by Richard Strauss, and opera ''La Bohème'' by Giacomo Puccini.


Notable births in 1896 included comedian George Burns, baseball player Rogers Hornsby, film director Howard Hawks, physicist Robert S. Mulliken, actress Hope Summers, inventor Léon Theremin, writer F. Scott Fitzgerald, singer and actress Ethel Waters, baseball player Bucky Harris, baseball player Jimmy Dykes, and lyricist Ira Gershwin.  Notable deaths included journalist Thomas W. Knox, photographer Mathew Brady, author Harriet Beecher Stowe, composer Anton Bruckner, inventor George Washington Gale Ferris Jr, and inventor Alfred Nobel.
Notable births in 1896 included comedian George Burns, baseball player Rogers Hornsby, film director Howard Hawks, physicist Robert S. Mulliken, actress Hope Summers, inventor Léon Theremin, writer F. Scott Fitzgerald, singer and actress Ethel Waters, baseball player Bucky Harris, baseball player Jimmy Dykes, and lyricist Ira Gershwin.  Notable deaths included journalist Thomas W. Knox, photographer Mathew Brady, author Harriet Beecher Stowe, composer Anton Bruckner, inventor George Washington Gale Ferris Jr, and inventor Alfred Nobel.

Revision as of 10:33, 12 June 2012

1896 was the 25th year after the founding of the City of Birmingham.

Events

Business

Education

Government

Religion

Sports

Individuals

Births

Durward Nickerson

Graduations

Marriages

Deaths

Works

Buildings

Context

In 1896, Utah was admitted as a state. The first modern Olympic Games were held. The Supreme Court case of Plessy v. Ferguson was decided, upholding segregation as "separate but equal." Charles Dow published the first edition of the Dow Jones Industrial Average. A tornado struck downtown St. Louis, Missouri, killing more than 255 and injuring over 1,000 people. An earthquake and tsunami in Sanriku, Japan killed 27,000. The Atlantic City rail crash killed 50 and seriously injured approximately 60. Republican William McKinley defeated William Jennings Bryan in the presidential election.

Notable books published in 1896 included The Damnation of Theron Ware by Harold Frederic, The Well at the World's End by William Morris, Tom Sawyer, Detective by Mark Twain, Facing the Flag by Jules Verne, The Island of Doctor Moreau by H. G. Wells, and poetry collection A Shropshire Lad by Alfred Edward Housman. Notable music released included "El Capitan March" by John Philip Sousa, "A Hot Time In The Old Town" by Joseph Hayden & Theodore A. Metz, Also sprach Zarathustra by Richard Strauss, and opera La Bohème by Giacomo Puccini.

Notable births in 1896 included comedian George Burns, baseball player Rogers Hornsby, film director Howard Hawks, physicist Robert S. Mulliken, actress Hope Summers, inventor Léon Theremin, writer F. Scott Fitzgerald, singer and actress Ethel Waters, baseball player Bucky Harris, baseball player Jimmy Dykes, and lyricist Ira Gershwin. Notable deaths included journalist Thomas W. Knox, photographer Mathew Brady, author Harriet Beecher Stowe, composer Anton Bruckner, inventor George Washington Gale Ferris Jr, and inventor Alfred Nobel.

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